February 3, 2008
W.Va. bridges inspected less often than most other states, data show
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"If we see anything of concern after reviewing the report, we'll ask for another inspection to be done on that bridge," he said.

All 27 overdue bridges now inspected, DOH says

Twelve percent of West Virginia's bridges - 844 bridges in all - didn't get an inspection within the 24 months that ended December 2006, according to the MSNBC.com analysis.

Most of those were on the 48-month plan.

When you look at each bridge's personal inspection schedule, 27 West Virginia bridges - 0.4 percent of all bridges in the state - were actually late for their inspection, the MSNBC analysis shows.

That agrees with state highways figures for that year, Murphy said. He said 100 percent of West Virginia's bridges are now up-to-date on their inspections.

After the Minnesota bridge collapse, the Gazette - like media outlets across the country - published information about the condition of state bridges. Some media outlets used data that were a year old, because that's how long it usually takes the federal government to release the information. The Gazette obtained newer data through the National Institute for Computer-Assisted Reporting, which in turn had obtained the data from the federal government in February 2007.

The latest data obtained by MSNBC.com were reported by states by April 2007, which ensured that the states had had the maximum amount of time allowed by law to get their 2006 inspection reports to the federal government.

The Federal Highway Administration has made the entire text data file available on its Web site, www.fhwa.dot.gov/bridge/nbi/ascii.cfm.

MSNBC.com has also made more user-friendly, state-by-state data files available at http://powerreporting.com/files/msnbc.

"We wanted to let the public, including journalists, look up the information on every bridge," reporter Bill Dedman said.

"Most states do not provide this information to the public on the state Web sites."

MSNBC.com also developed an interactive "Bridge Tracker" that allows users to check the condition and inspection dates of bridges in their area (bridges that carry fewer than 10,000 vehicles per day or for which latitude and longitude were not available are not on the map). Visit http://bridges.msnbc.com.

To contact staff writer Tara Tuckwiller, use e-mail or call 348-5189.

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